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  • Article
    Mims RB.
    J Natl Med Assoc. 1977 Dec;69(12):873-8.
    Groups of female rats were injected daily for 14 days with 10 mg of cortisone acetate subcutaneously, to study the mechanisms of glucocorticoid suppression on the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis. Pituitary adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) content, plasma ACTH, adrenal venous corticosterone, adrenal weights, and the catabolic effects on body weight were studied simultaneously (under stressful and non-stressful conditions) before, during, and up to six weeks after cortisone. This study confirmed the results of other investigators that cortisone acetate caused catabolic weight loss and adrenal atrophy, but it was noted to persist up to six weeks after the injections. Glucocorticoid acetate was more effective in causing ACTH-axis suppression than succinate or phosphate preparations, and the effects were dose and time related. Significant depletion of pituitary ACTH content, suppression of plasma ACTH, and corticosterone secretion occurred five to seven days after beginning cortisone acetate (p=<0.001); it was continuous throughout the injection schedule (p=<0.001); it remained for two to four weeks after the cortisone was discontinued (p=<0.001). The animals showed minimum plasma ACTH responsiveness to severe acute stress during this two to four-week suppression phase, but rapid recovery occurred thereafter. Plasma ACTH was undetectable up to six weeks post-cortisone when the animals were not under stress. This may be related to residual cortisone acetate found at the injection sites, or to an altered or different ACTH-axis control mechanism. The sequence of events during recovery from cortisone suppression appeared to be (1) repletion of corticotrophin-releasing hormone (by inference), (2) repletion of pituitary ACTH content, (3) secretion of plasma ACTH, (4) reversal of adrenal atrophy, and (5) subsequent secretion of corticosterone.
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